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Oct 7, 10:44 PM EDT

Pakistan Bombing Prompts Ban on Gatherings 

By KHALID TANVEER
Associated Press Writer


MULTAN, Pakistan (AP) -- A bomb attack on Sunni Muslim radicals in central Pakistan 
Thursday killed at least 39 people, wounded more than 100 and prompted the government 
to ban religious and political gatherings nationwide.

Two bombs planted in a car and motorcycle exploded at a pre-dawn gathering of about 
3,000 Sunnis in the city of Multan in what police suspected was a sectarian attack.

Some 2,000 angry Sunnis gathered outside a hospital where victims were taken, shouting 
"Shiites are infidels!" and slogans against the government, witnesses said. They 
shattered the windshields of two ambulances and burned tires, sending a pall of black 
smoke into the air.

About 1,000 police were called into the city and soldiers were patrolling to stop 
Sunni and Shiites from clashing. Schools and colleges in Multan were closed for two 
days to stop potential student protests, said Ijaz Chaudhry, a senior government 
administrator.

The bombings came six days after another suspected sectarian attack by a suicide 
bomber inside a crowded Shiite mosque in the eastern city of Sialkot during Friday 
prayers which killed 31 people and injured more than 50.

After Thursday's attack, Interior Minister Aftab Khan Sherpao announced the government 
had banned public gatherings - except for prayers on Friday, the Muslim sabbath - to 
prevent more attacks. He did not say how the ban would last.

"The federal government has asked the provincial governments to impose a ban on all 
kinds of political and religious gathering, except from Friday prayers," Sherpao said 
at a news conference in Islamabad.

Police also tightened security in other cities. In Karachi, scene of sectarian attacks 
and unrest in May, extra police were deployed at mosques.

The bombs went off around 4:40 a.m. in a residential neighborhood of Multan as 
thousands were dispersing after prayers for the soul of Maulana Azam Tariq, the leader 
of the Sunni radical group Sipah-e-Sahaba who was gunned down near Islamabad last 
year. The group was marking the anniversary of his death, which was blamed on Shiite 
Muslim militants.

A 15-pound remote-controlled bomb planted inside a Suzuki car exploded first, 
officials said. It did not appear to be a suicide attack. Two minutes later, a second 
bomb attached to a motorcycle went off, deputy city police chief Arshad Hameed said.

"It seems to be an act of sectarian terrorism, but we are still investigating," he 
told The Associated Press.

Officials at the Nishtar government hospital said at least 39 people were killed and 
more than 100 were wounded, about 50 seriously. Some 50 others were treated for minor 
injuries and discharged.

Inside the hospital, bloodied victims were crammed into an emergency ward, some lying 
two to a bed. Dozens of dead were placed side-by-side on the floor of another ward.

At the scene of the attack, pools of blood and shoes of victims were scattered near 
the charred remains of the car bomb.

Jamil Usmani, 26, who had been standing in a nearby parking lot with friends, said a 
stampede after the bombing caused many injuries.

"The explosion numbed our ears, we saw people falling on each other, everybody was 
crying, everybody was running," he said. "Many people were injured in the stampede, we 
started picking them up and asked passing cars for help."

Pakistan has a history of sectarian violence. Sunni Muslims make up about 80 percent 
of the 150 million people in Pakistan, and the rest are mostly Shiites. The vast 
majority of both sects live in harmony but radical elements on both sides carry out 
attacks.

Pakistan, a key ally in the U.S.-led war on terrorism, has also suffered a spate of 
attacks in recent years.

The attack Thursday came hours after the burial of an alleged top al-Qaida operative 
and Sunni Muslim militant Amjad Hussain Farooqi at a village in eastern Punjab 
province.

Farooqi was killed in a shootout with security forces Sept. 26 in southern Pakistan. 
He was a member of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, a breakaway militant faction of Sipah-e-Sahaba, 
and had been accused in attacks on Shiites, and in the 2002 kidnapping and beheading 
of American journalist Daniel Pearl.

The leader of Sipah-e-Sahaba Ahmad Ludhianvi blamed Thursday's bombings on radical 
Shiites.

He demanded the immediate arrest of the attackers, but added the group's activists had 
been told not "to take the law into their own hands."

"We are peaceful but there will be no guarantee for peace after one week if those who 
have killed our people are not arrested," Ludhianvi told 5,000 mourners at a mass 
funeral for 31 victims of the attack.

� 2004 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
 
 





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